RoadKill

Guilty Pleasure.

Call it grand theft design, but Midway's auto combat game steals from Rockstar for good reason: RoadKill adds suspiciously familiar single-player gangster missions to the multiplayer arenas people loved in Twisted Metal Black. And it works. Three sprawling cities serve as backdrops for gun battles, and though you can't walk around, gun-turret and sniper missions break up the driving. But between its immature "Mature-rated" content (naughty language is prevalent) and rough gameplay, RoadKill narrowly misses excellence. Twisted Metal fans may enjoy the new weapons and radio stations, assuming they haven't outgrown the juvenile roughneck humor.